War of the Worlds Extinction 2024 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Sex-Positive 2024 - Movies (Mar 28th)
The Farmers Daughter 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Dangerous Lies Unmasking Belle Gibson 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Flight Risk 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Alexander and the Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Road Trip 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
The Life List 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Renner 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
The Rule of Jenny Pen 2024 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Bring Them Down 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Love Hurts 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Holland 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
The House Was Not Hungry Then 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
One Million Babes BC 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Through the Door 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Snow White 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
England’s Lions The New Generation 2025 - Movies (Mar 26th)
The Last Keeper 2024 - Movies (Mar 26th)
The Brutalist 2024 - Movies (Mar 25th)
Mufasa The Lion King 2024 - Movies (Mar 25th)
The Monkey 2025 - Movies (Mar 25th)
The One Show - (Mar 29th)
On Patrol- Live - (Mar 29th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Mar 29th)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Mar 29th)
The Patrick Star Show - (Mar 29th)
Helsinki Crimes - (Mar 29th)
One Killer Question - (Mar 29th)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Mar 29th)
Cops - (Mar 29th)
The Price Is Right - (Mar 29th)
The Young and the Restless - (Mar 29th)
Lets Make a Deal - (Mar 29th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Mar 29th)
All In with Chris Hayes - (Mar 29th)
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives - (Mar 29th)
Gold Rush - (Mar 29th)
Horrible Histories - (Mar 29th)
WWE SmackDown - (Mar 29th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Mar 28th)
Gogglebox - (Mar 28th)
A young girl’s fiery dance, accidentally caught on 16 mm film in the street. The viewer is confronted by the sacrificial and the passionate, the strong and the fragile, the fleeting and the eternal. These are the faces of femininity.
Ostensibly searching for an emotional connection with her aging father, the woman contemplates her own inherited culture and familial touchstones. Her North American pop culture sensibility fuses with a distorted Japanese perspective to create a surreal interpretation of a “Japan of the imagination.” This fictional landscape is peppered with invented Japanese myths, ruminations on memory loss, the temporal space of digital photography and the ghosts of inherited imagination.
This film is composed of three sections created to accompany a piece of music (by Barbara Feldman) on a Homeric poem.
Nearly devoid of editing resources, the videos feature single shots of anonymous people in daily life, subtly revealed/highlighted through zooming. Instead of uncovering reality, though, the videos end up turning it into pure invention. The “videorhizomes” are not limited to production and screening in regular, traditional circuits. The process includes sending the videos to a person that is randomly chosen from the phone book.
Nearly devoid of editing resources, the videos feature single shots of anonymous people in daily life, subtly revealed/highlighted through zooming. Instead of uncovering reality, though, the videos end up turning it into pure invention. The “videorhizomes” are not limited to production and screening in regular, traditional circuits. The process includes sending the videos to a person that is randomly chosen from the phone book.
The shadows of screams climb beyond the hills. It has happened before. But this will be the last time. The last few sense it, withdrawing deep into the forest. They cry out into the black, as the shadows pass away, into the ground.
Colossal explores the complexities of grief and the process of grieving as understood through the myth of a Man as he ventures through shifting landscapes ruminating.
ISLANDS explores a cinematic journey of two astronauts. As they enter Earth’s atmosphere the structure transforms. The spacecraft becomes the meteor from a myth of a tribesman; it triggers an old lady’s memory of a lover from her past. As these diverse characters converge in a plane of reality, we confront a particular form of gravity we covertly feel—falling in love.
"Mapang-akit" is an offshoot of a documentary project made with an Icelandic filmmaker and uses the outtakes from the Hudas Hudas festival in Antique, where a community bonds over a large effigy of Judas Iscariot during Holy Week. Amidst it is a found story of a man who returns home to his death after pursuing a woman in a neighboring village.
Using a 35mm strip of motion picture slug featuring the recently deceased American comedian Richard Pryor, this extended Rorschach assault on the eyes moves out of a flickering chaos created by incompatible film gauges into a punchline involving historically incompatible racial stereotypes.